Тёмный

History Of Wood Lane Hall 

The Yorkshire Explorer
Подписаться 348
Просмотров 285
50% 1

Sowerby, Halifax, West Yorkshire
Wood Lane Hall stands in New Road, Sowerby
The Wood family held land here in the 15th century.
The F-plan house was bought by Richard Dearden.
It was rebuilt and cased in stone by his son, John, in 1649. It is dated 1649 IDED for Elizabeth and John Dearden.
There is a sundial dated 1651.
Subsequent owners and tenants have included
Joshua Dearden [1696]
Benjamin Holroyd [1720s]
Elkanah Holroyd
James Holroyd lived here before he moved to Aked's Road
James Thomas Berry lived here before he moved to Aked's Road
Samuel Aked [1840s]
William Sutcliffe [1854]
Henry Wainhouse bought the Hall [1887] & it stayed with the family until after the death of his son John; it was sold about 1942
Alfred Siddall [1887-1910]
Joseph Saltonstall [1901, 1911]
the Crossley family
the Holroyd family
Whitfield Sugden & family [from at least 1948-1962]
J. Walker to whom the Sugdens left the hall
Richard Hoyle
Herbert Naylor [early 1900s]
This is a good example of a Halifax House with a Rose Window over the porch, and with many finials and gargoyles.
The floor of the room with the Rose Window is made from a tree felled in the grounds of the house.
The house incorporates some features of neighbouring Halifax houses:
The finials on the battlements are similar to those at Kershaw House
The great hall window, the battlements and the rose window are modelled on those of Elland New Hall
The plaster ceiling is comparable to that at Howroyd
The 2-storey porch is balanced by the parlour wing, as at Barkisland Hall
It is one of the last remaining two-storey open-hall houses.
It is said that there is a passage from the house to St Peter's Church, although recent searches have failed to find this.
The hall was divided into 3 dwellings - probably before World War I.
One of the bedrooms - Bedroom #6 - was fitted out to resemble a ship's cabin with material salvaged from the Pacific Steam Navigation Line by a member of the Sugden family who served on board ship and enjoyed cargo ship cruising. There is a ship's bell with instructions
One ring for steward, two for stewardess
The room has a life jacket and other cruising memorabilia and has been kept as a 1920s / 1930s ship's cabin
In 1949, when the house was occupied by Miss Marjorie Sugden and her 2 sisters, thieves broke in and stole and quantity of silver and other goods valued at over £3,000. 18 months later, a man was arrested and 3 candlesticks, identified as part of the haul from the Hall, were found in his bag. During the trial, the silverware disappeared from the police headquarters in Halifax and was never found.
There is a wealth of oak panelling, rising to shoulder height with a carved frieze.
The hall ceiling has a central panel of decorative plasterwork.
The rooms overlooking the valley were given paired sash windows in Georgian times.
Others have more utilitarian plate glass, but one with diamond panes looks to be 17th century.
Though the main front suggests a typical H-plan, Wood Lane Hall is unusually deep.
The Great Hall is square and behind it is a full line of rooms facing west, including the old kitchen with a huge hearth, and a modern kitchen with an Aga.
Above are five big bedrooms.
The elegant Georgian-style stair is probably a Sugden introduction, as the cantilevered treads are concrete.
The yeoman clothiers who placed the date of 1649 over the front door of Wood Lane Hall would find the house wonderfully unchanged.
John and Elizabeth Dearden, the builders, followed the new fashion for symmetry, but they also wanted a traditional great hall and an off-centre porch with a robust wheel window above.
They paid the mason for spiky finials on the battlements, carved faces on the gutter spouts and emblematic stops over the windows.
Wood Lane Hall is secluded and remote.
The house is built of large blocks of squared stone so crisply cut that it would be easy to count them.
The builders knew how to stay warm, for all the main rooms have handsome stone fireplaces.
The grandest, in the Great Hall, is tall enough to stand in and is flanked by Ionic columns topped by rich Jacobean carving
In 2007, Richard Hoyle applied for planning permission for
conversion and extension of outbuildings and garage [at the Hall] to form a holiday let
The building was in progress in January 2011

Опубликовано:

 

16 окт 2024

Поделиться:

Ссылка:

Скачать:

Готовим ссылку...

Добавить в:

Мой плейлист
Посмотреть позже
Комментарии    
Далее
History Of Holdsworth House
11:57
Просмотров 530
Cole Palmer Revenge vs Man City 🥶
00:20
Просмотров 1,5 млн
Outsmarted 😂
00:20
Просмотров 4,1 млн
Silverlands Manor - The Actors Orphanage (Abandoned)
15:01
How we LOST our CASTLE... Hinchingbrooke House Part 1
20:05
What Happened to Whitemarsh Hall?
7:27
Просмотров 126 тыс.
SPEKE HALL HISTORY- NATIONAL TRUST
20:28
Просмотров 90
History Of Thrum Hall Stadium
7:14
Просмотров 687
Battleford Hall
5:04
Просмотров 66 тыс.
In Search Of Summer Wine
12:50
Просмотров 17 тыс.
Cole Palmer Revenge vs Man City 🥶
00:20
Просмотров 1,5 млн